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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: November 27, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Wyatt M. Brown or search for Wyatt M. Brown in all documents.

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made forthwith for the opening of trade between the two counties, and vessels will no doubt, before the close of the week, be leaving laden with produce. Pensacola to be taken. The Washington correspondence of the New York World says: You may soon expect to hear that Pensacola is taken. The Navy Department make no concealment of the fact that dispatches are expected daily from the Gulf with an account of the opening of the guns of Fort Pickens upon the rebel batteries. Colonel Brown has repeatedly written for orders allowing him to blow Bragg and his batteries off the opposite shore. He has been chafing like a hound in the lash; but if I am not mistaken the work has been given that will make Pensacola ours. The selected prisoners. The New York Journal of Commerce, of yesterday, says: We learn from a surgeen recently returned from Richmond, that the apprehensions of the people in regard to the horrible ill-treatment of Col. Cogawell and other officers
y-boat that crossed near Point Pleasant has been destroyed. A soldier who had been taken prisoner, but who escaped from Cairo, reported that soldiers were coming into that place in great numbers, and that the day before he left (Wednesday) nine regiments arrived. There was a general expectation at Columbus that there will soon be an invasion of a more serious character than the late one at Belmont. Another Hatteras prisoner returned. The Tarboro' (N. C.) Mercury says: Dr. Wyatt M. Brown, who was captured by the Yankees in the fall of Hatteras, passed through Tarboro' last Friday en route to his home and friends in Washington, having been exchanged for a Surgeon in the Lincoln army whom we held. Dr. B. and the surgical Yankee for whom he was exchanged were old acquaintances, and it was through the joint request of both the prisoners that the exchange was effected. Further of the Royal Yacht Affair. The Galveston Civilian furnishes some additional particulars